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Special offer. Foulds: A World Requiem

Jeanne-Michèle Charbonnet (soprano), Catherine Wyn-Rogers (mezzo-soprano), Stuart Skelton (tenor) & Gerald Finley (baritone)

Trinity Boys Choir, Crouch End Festival Chorus, Philharmonia Chorus, BBC Symphony Chorus & BBC Symphony Orchestra, Leon Botstein

Foulds: A World Requiem
Anyone looking for the blazing, crazy brilliance of Foulds's Mantras, April-England or Dynamic Triptych is likely to come away with a very negative impression. There are occasional sparks of...

Special offer. Foulds: A World Requiem

Jeanne-Michèle Charbonnet (soprano), Catherine Wyn-Rogers (mezzo-soprano), Stuart Skelton (tenor) & Gerald Finley (baritone)

Trinity Boys Choir, Crouch End Festival Chorus, Philharmonia Chorus, BBC Symphony Chorus & BBC Symphony Orchestra, Leon Botstein

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2 SACDs

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$41.00

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96 kHz, 24 bit, FLAC/ALAC/WAV

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44.1 kHz, 16 bit, FLAC/ALAC/WAV

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This release includes a digital booklet

Stream now Hi-RES 96 kHz, 24 bit
Anyone looking for the blazing, crazy brilliance of Foulds's Mantras, April-England or Dynamic Triptych is likely to come away with a very negative impression. There are occasional sparks of...

About

‘It went deeper down and reached higher up, it was bigger, broader, nobler and reached out more into the eternal than music as it is commonly understood and interpreted, or as any music than that heard by the great masters, has ever done. It is indeed a world heritage.’ Thus wrote the Labour MP Frederick Pethick-Lawrence after attending the premiere of A World Requiem on Armistice Night 1923, and his statement was typical of the audience reaction on that night.

Live concert recording

Contents and tracklist

Part I: I. Requiem
Track length8:42
Part I: II. Pronuntiatio
Track length4:05
Part I: III. Confessio
Track length5:46
Part I: IV. Jubilato
Track length5:06
Part I: V. Audite
Track length7:04
Part I: VI. Pax
Track length3:53
Part I: VII. Consolatio
Track length5:08
Part I: VIII. Refutatio
Track length0:38
Part I: IX. Lux veritatis
Track length1:19
Part I: X. Requiem
Track length3:25
Part II: XI. Laudamus
Track length6:31
Part II: XII. Elysium
Track length6:24
Part II: XIII. In Pace
Track length3:17
Part II: XIII. Hymn of the Redeemed
Track length4:37
Part II: XIV. Angeli
Track length3:27
Part II: XV. Vox Dei
Track length3:07
Part II: XVI. Adventus
Track length4:01
Part II: XVII. Vigilate
Track length2:03
Part II: XVIII. Promissio et Invocatio
Track length7:30
Part II: XIX. Benedictio
Track length1:41
Part II: XX. Consummatus
Track length2:08

Spotlight on this release

Awards and reviews

February 2008

Anyone looking for the blazing, crazy brilliance of Foulds's Mantras, April-England or Dynamic Triptych is likely to come away with a very negative impression. There are occasional sparks of fire… But there's barely a hint of the visionary daring of the best Foulds.

2010

Foulds conducted A World Requiem's 1923 premiere at the Festival of Remembrance, using 1250 performers. This present performance, the first in more than 70 years, was given on Remembrance Day 2007, and, aside from a rather unwieldy soprano, is a triumph, with special praise due to baritone Gerald Finley and conductor Leon Botstein.
A World Requiem is the kind of piece that could only have grown from wholehearted sincerity, in this case a very personal and inspired response to the devastating losses and suffering in the First World War. Cast in 20 interlinking sections, much of the work's musical style emerges off the backs of Requiems by Verdi and Berlioz but what we actually hear is more reminiscent of Busoni, the sombre tread of the opening Requiem, the ethereal, half-lit solos and duets, and the searing climaxes, not to mention the spooky use of quarter-tones. The fifth movement 'Audite' includes a stirring summons to 'you men of all the continents', an impressive roll call of nations (individually named) and a plea for universal peace.
The contrast between the sombre-hued close of the first part and the day-bright opening of the second – a celebration of deliverance – could hardly be more telling. From here on, the mood and language become more esoteric and the scoring is often extremely delicate. Sections based on texts from Revelation and the Gospel of St John lead to an affirmation of Christ's spirit and the work ends in ecstatic joy.
Foulds's work is as ambitiously all-embracing as Mahler's Third or Eighth symphonies, and in its way almost as moving as Britten's WarRequiem – though these are spontaneous reactions forged in the light of a first encounter.
Posterity's work starts here but her ultimate verdict could well be pretty favourable. Calum MacDonald's booklet-notes serve as an invaluable listening aid.

February 2008

Foulds conducted A World Requiem's 1923 premiere at the Festival of Remembrance, using 1250 performers. This present performance, the first in more than 70 years, was given on Remembrance Day last year, and aside from a rather unwieldy soprano, is a triumph, with special praise due to baritone Gerald Finley and conductor Leon Botstein.

2011 edition

this performance exerts a gripping hold on the listener. The recording is very much in the demonstration bracket.
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